fbpx
Wikipedia

Edwin P. Morrow

Edwin Porch Morrow (November 28, 1877 – June 15, 1935) was an American politician, who served as the 40th Governor of Kentucky from 1919 to 1923. He was the only Republican elected to this office between 1907 and 1927. He championed the typical Republican causes of his day, namely equal rights for African-Americans and the use of force to quell violence. Morrow had been schooled in his party's principles by his father, Thomas Z. Morrow, who was its candidate for governor in 1883, and his uncle, William O. Bradley, who was elected governor in 1895. Both men were founding members of the Republican Party in Kentucky.

Edwin P. Morrow
40th Governor of Kentucky
In office
December 9, 1919 – December 11, 1923
LieutenantThruston Ballard
Preceded byJames D. Black
Succeeded byWilliam J. Fields
U.S. District Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky
In office
1910–1913
Appointed byWilliam Howard Taft
Personal details
BornNovember 28, 1877
Somerset, Kentucky
DiedJune 15, 1935(1935-06-15) (aged 57)
Frankfort, Kentucky
Resting placeFrankfort Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
SpouseKatherine Hale Waddle
RelationsSon of Thomas Z. Morrow
Nephew of William O. Bradley
Alma materUniversity of Cincinnati Law School
ProfessionLawyer
Signature
Military service
Branch/serviceU.S. Army
Years of service1898–1899
RankSecond lieutenant
Unit4th Kentucky Infantry Regiment
Battles/warsSpanish–American War

After rendering non-combat service in the Spanish–American War, Morrow graduated from the University of Cincinnati Law School in 1902 and opened his practice in Lexington, Kentucky. He made a name for himself almost immediately by securing the acquittal of a black man charged with murder based on an extorted confession and perjured testimony. He was appointed U.S. District Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky by President William Howard Taft in 1910 and served until he was removed from office in 1913 by President Woodrow Wilson. In 1915, he ran for governor against his good friend, Augustus O. Stanley. Stanley won the election by 471 votes, making the 1915 contest the closest gubernatorial race in the state's history.

Morrow ran for governor again in 1919. His opponent, James D. Black, had ascended to the governorship earlier that year when Stanley resigned to take a seat in the U.S. Senate. Morrow encouraged voters to "Right the Wrong of 1915" and ran on a progressive platform that included women's suffrage and quelling racial violence. He charged the Democratic administration with corruption, citing specific examples, and won the general election in a landslide. With a friendly legislature in 1920, he passed much of his agenda into law, including an anti-lynching law and reorganizing state government. He won national acclaim for preventing the lynching of a black prisoner in 1920. He was not hesitant to remove local officials who did not deter or quell mob violence. By 1922, Democrats regained control of the General Assembly, and Morrow could not accomplish much in the second half of his term. Following his term as governor, he served on the United States Railroad Labor Board and the Railway Mediation Board but never again held elected office. He died of a heart attack on June 15, 1935, while living with a cousin in Frankfort.

Early life

 
Morrow's house in Somerset

Edwin Morrow was of Scottish descent and was born to Thomas Zanzinger and Virginia Catherine (Bradley) Morrow in Somerset, Kentucky, on November 28, 1877.[1][2] He and his twin brother, Charles, were the youngest of eight children.[3] His father was one of the founders of the Republican Party in Kentucky and an unsuccessful candidate for governor in 1883.[4] His mother was a sister to William O'Connell Bradley, who was elected the first Republican governor of Kentucky in 1895.[5] Morrow's great-grandfather Thomas Morrow emigrated to America from Scotland before the Revolutionary War.

Morrow's early education was in the public schools of Somerset.[5] At age 14, he entered preparatory school at St. Mary's College near Lebanon, Kentucky.[6] He continued there throughout 1891 and 1892.[6] From there, he enrolled at Cumberland College (now the University of the Cumberlands) in Williamsburg, Kentucky, and distinguished himself in the debating society.[1] He was also interested in sports, playing halfback on the football team and left field on the baseball team.[7]

On June 24, 1898, Morrow enlisted as a private in the 4th Kentucky Infantry Regiment for service in the Spanish–American War.[1][5][8] He was first stationed at Lexington, Kentucky, and later trained at Anniston, Alabama.[9] Due to a bout with typhoid fever, he never saw active duty and mustered out as a second lieutenant on February 12, 1899.[10] In 1900, he matriculated for the fall semester at the University of Cincinnati Law School.[9] He graduated with a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1902.[1]

Morrow opened his practice in Lexington.[1] He established his reputation in one of his first cases—the trial of William Moseby, a black man accused of murder.[1] Moseby's first trial had ended in a hung jury, but because the evidence against him included a confession (which he later recanted), most observers believed he would be convicted in his second trial.[11] Unable to find a defense lawyer for Moseby, the judge in the case turned to Morrow, who, as a young lawyer, was eager for work.[11] Morrow proved that his client's testimony had been extorted; he had been told that a lynch mob waited outside the jail for him, but no such mob had ever existed.[12] Morrow further showed that other testimony against his client was false.[1] Moseby was acquitted on September 21, 1902.[12]

Morrow returned to Somerset in 1903.[4] There, he married Katherine Hale Waddle on June 18, 1903.[5] Waddle's father had studied law under Morrow's father, and Edwin and Katherine had been playmates, schoolmates, and later sweethearts.[13] The couple had two children, Edwina Haskell in July 1904 and Charles Robert in November 1908.[14]

Political career

In 1904, Morrow was appointed city attorney for Somerset, serving until 1908.[4] President William Howard Taft appointed him U.S. District Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky in 1910.[5] He continued in this position until he was removed from office by President Woodrow Wilson in 1913.[4][5]

 
William O. Bradley, Morrow's uncle, was elected governor of Kentucky in 1895.

Morrow's first political experience was working in his uncle William O. Bradley's gubernatorial campaign in 1895.[2] In 1899, Republican gubernatorial candidate William S. Taylor offered to make Morrow his Secretary of State in exchange for Bradley's support in the election; Bradley refused.[15] Despite the encouragement of friends, Morrow declined to run for governor in 1911.[4]

In 1912, Morrow was chosen as the Republican candidate for the Senate seat of Thomas Paynter.[16] Paynter had decided not to seek re-election, and the Democrats nominated Ollie M. James of Crittenden County.[16] The General Assembly was heavily Democratic and united behind James.[16] On a joint ballot, James defeated Morrow by a vote of 105–28.[16] Due to the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment the following year, this was the last time the Kentucky legislature would elect a senator.[16]

At the state Republican convention in Lexington on June 15, 1915, Morrow was chosen as the Republican candidate for governor over Latt F. McLaughlin.[17][18] His Democratic opponent was his close friend, Augustus O. Stanley.[4] Morrow charged previous Democratic administrations with corruption and called for the election of a Republican because "You cannot clean house with a dirty broom."[19] Both men ran on progressive platforms, and the election went in Stanley's favor by only 471 votes.[4] Although it was the closest gubernatorial vote in the state's history, Morrow refused to challenge the results, which significantly increased his popularity.[17] His decision was influenced by the fact that a challenge would be decided by the General Assembly, which had a Democratic majority in both houses.[20]

Governor of Kentucky

Morrow served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1916, 1920, and 1928.[2] In 1919, he was chosen by acclamation as his party's candidate for governor.[17] This time, his opponent was James D. Black.[4] Black was Stanley's lieutenant governor and had ascended to the governorship in May 1919 when Stanley resigned to take a seat in the U.S. Senate.[4]

Morrow encouraged the state's voters to "Right the Wrong of 1915".[21] He again ran on a progressive platform, advocating an amendment to the state constitution to grant women's suffrage.[4] His support was not as strong for a prohibition amendment.[4] He attacked the Stanley–Black administration as corrupt.[4] Days before the election, he exposed a contract the state Board of Control awarded to a non-existent company.[4] Historian Lowell H. Harrison argued that Black's refusal to remove the members of the board following this revelation probably sealed his defeat.[4] Morrow won the general election by more than 40,000 votes.[4] It was the largest margin of victory for a Republican gubernatorial candidate in the state's history.[21]

 
Morrow signs the bill ratifying the 19th Amendment, Kentucky Equal Rights Association members look on in celebration, January 6, 1920.

On January 6, 1920, Governor Morrow signed the bill ratifying the Nineteenth Amendment, making Kentucky the 23rd state to ratify it, and the moment is captured in a photograph with members of the Kentucky Equal Rights Association. During the 1920 legislative session, the Republicans held a majority in the state House of Representatives and were a minority by only two votes in the state Senate.[4] During the session, Morrow was often able to convince C. W. Burton, a Democratic senator from Grant County, to support Republican proposals.[22] Tie votes in the Senate were broken by Republican lieutenant governor S. Thruston Ballard.[22] Consequently, Morrow was able to effect a considerable reorganization of the state government, including replacing the Board of Control with a nonpartisan Board of Charities and Corrections, centralizing highway works, and revising property taxes.[4][23] He oversaw improvements to the education system, including better textbook selection and a tax on racetracks to support a minimum salary for teachers.[4][22] Among Morrow's reforms that did not pass was a proposal to make the judiciary nonpartisan.[4]

Morrow urged enforcement of state laws against carrying concealed weapons and restricted activities of the Ku Klux Klan.[4] During his first year in office, he granted only 100 pardons.[24] This was a considerable decrease from the number granted by his immediate predecessors. During their first years in office, J. C. W. Beckham granted 350 pardons, James B. McCreary (during his second stint as governor) granted 139, and Augustus O. Stanley granted 257.[24] He was also an active member of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation, a society for the elimination of racial violence in the South.[25]

 
A mob gathered outside the courthouse during the trial of Will Lockett in 1920.

On February 9, 1920, Morrow dispatched the Kentucky National Guard to Lexington to protect Will Lockett, a black World War I veteran on trial for murder.[26] Morrow told the state adjutant general "Do as much as you have to do to keep that negro in the hands of the law. If he falls into the hands of the mob I do not expect to see you alive."[27] Lockett had already confessed, without the benefit of a lawyer, to the murder.[26] His trial took only thirty minutes as he pleaded guilty but asked for a life sentence instead of death.[27] Despite his plea, he was sentenced to die in the electric chair.[27]

A crowd of several thousand gathered outside the courthouse while Lockett's trial was underway.[26] A cameraman asked a large group of those gathered to shake their fists and yell so he could get a picture.[28] The rest of the crowd mistakenly believed they were storming the courthouse and rushed forward.[28] In the ensuing skirmish, one policeman was injured so badly that his arm was later amputated.[29] The National Guard opened fire, killing six people and wounding approximately fifty.[28] Some members of the mob looted nearby stores in search of weapons to retaliate, but reinforcements arrived from a nearby army post by mid-afternoon.[30] Martial law was declared, and no further violence was perpetrated.[30] A month later, Lockett was executed at the Kentucky State Penitentiary in Eddyville.[30]

The incident is believed to be the first forceful suppression of a lynch mob by state and local officials in the South.[26] Morrow received a laudatory telegram from the NAACP, and most of the national press regarding the incident was favorable. W. E. B. Du Bois called it the "Second Battle of Lexington".[29] Morrow was consistent in his use of state troops to end violence in the state. In 1922, he again dispatched the National Guard to quell a violent mill strike in Newport.[4]

Morrow also demanded consistency from local law enforcement officials. In 1921, he removed the Woodford County jailer from office because he allowed a black inmate to be lynched and offered a reward of $25,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrators.[31] Citizens of Versailles were more outraged that the jailer had been removed from office than that the prisoner had been lynched.[32] The locals refused to aid in the investigation, and the lynchers were never arrested or charged.[33] Local officials appointed the jailer's wife to finish his term in an attempt to skirt the removal.[34]

In August 1922, a traveling salesman named Jack Eaton was arrested for allegedly assaulting several young girls.[34] The girls' parents refused to press charges, and Eaton was released.[34] Later, he was captured by a mob, who cut him several times and poured turpentine into his wounds.[34] An investigation found that the Scott County sheriff had willfully delivered Eaton to the mob, and Morrow removed him from office.[34] Though Eaton was a white man, blacks were elated with the removal because they hoped it would encourage other jailers to step up efforts to protect against lynchings and mob violence.[34]

Morrow was frequently mentioned as a potential candidate for vice president in 1920. Still, he withdrew his name from consideration, sticking to a campaign promise not to seek a higher office while governor. On July 27, 1920, he made a speech in Northampton, Massachusetts, officially notifying Calvin Coolidge of his nomination for that office. Although he supported Frank O. Lowden for president, the nomination went to Warren G. Harding, and Morrow campaigned vigorously on behalf of his party's ticket.[35]

In his address to the 1922 legislature, Morrow asked for $50 million for improvements to the state highway system and the repeal of all laws denying equal rights to women.[4] He also recommended a large bond issue to finance improvements to the state's universities, schools, prisons, and hospitals.[36] By this time, however, the Republicans had surrendered their majority in the state House, and practically all of Morrow's proposals were voted down.[4] Morrow countered by vetoing several Democratic bills, including $700,000 in appropriations.[4][37] Among the few accomplishments of the 1922 legislature were the passage of an anti-lynching law, the abolition of convict labor, and the establishment of normal schools at Murray and Morehead.[28][37] Today, these schools are Murray State University and Morehead State University, respectively. The 1922 legislature also established a commission to govern My Old Kentucky Home State Park and approved construction of the Jefferson Davis Monument.[37]

Although Morrow gained national praise for his handling of the Lockett trial, historian James C. Klotter opined that he "left behind a solid, and rather typical, record for a Kentucky governor."[38] He cited Morrow's fiscal conservatism and inability to control the legislature in 1922 as reasons for his lackluster assessment. However, he praised Morrow's advancement of racial equality in the state. The state constitution prohibited Morrow from seeking a second consecutive term, and the achievements of his administration were not significant enough to ensure the election of Charles I. Dawson, his would-be Republican successor in the gubernatorial election of 1923.[38]

Later career and death

Following his term as governor, Morrow retired to Somerset, where he became active in the Watchmen of the Republic, an organization devoted to eradicating prejudice and promoting tolerance.[4] He served on the United States Railroad Labor Board from 1923 to 1926 and its successor, the Railway Mediation Board, from 1926 to 1934.[4] He resigned to run for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives representing the Ninth District, but lost his party's nomination to John M. Robsion.[5][36]

Following his defeat in the congressional primary, Morrow planned to return to Lexington to resume his law practice.[36] On June 15, 1935, he died unexpectedly of a heart attack while temporarily living with a cousin in Frankfort.[36] He is buried in Frankfort Cemetery.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Hay, p. 152
  2. ^ a b c d "Kentucky Governor Edwin Porch Morrow". National Governors Association
  3. ^ Jillson, p. 22
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Harrison in The Kentucky Encyclopedia, p. 655
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Powell, p. 86
  6. ^ a b Jillson, p. 24
  7. ^ Jillson, p. 25
  8. ^ Tapp, p. 376
  9. ^ a b Jillson, p. 27
  10. ^ Cotterill in Dictionary of American Biography
  11. ^ a b Jillson, p. 30
  12. ^ a b Jillson, p. 31
  13. ^ Jillson, p. 33
  14. ^ Jillson, p. 34
  15. ^ Tapp, p. 425
  16. ^ a b c d e Klotter, p. 220
  17. ^ a b c Hay, p. 153
  18. ^ Appleton, p. 32
  19. ^ Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 285
  20. ^ Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, pp. 285–286
  21. ^ a b Klotter, p. 233
  22. ^ a b c Klotter, p. 267
  23. ^ Jillson, p. 56
  24. ^ a b Jillson, p. 61
  25. ^ Wright, p. 12
  26. ^ a b c d Klotter, p. 69
  27. ^ a b c Wright, p. 195
  28. ^ a b c d Harrison in A New History of Kentucky, p. 351
  29. ^ a b Wright, p. 196
  30. ^ a b c Klotter, p. 70
  31. ^ Hay, p. 154
  32. ^ Wright, p. 203
  33. ^ Wright, pp. 203–204
  34. ^ a b c d e f Wright, p. 204
  35. ^ Hay, pp. 154–155
  36. ^ a b c d Hay, p. 155
  37. ^ a b c Klotter, p. 268
  38. ^ a b Klotter, p. 275

Bibliography

  • Appleton Jr., Thomas H. (January 1977). "Prohibition and Politics in Kentucky: The Gubernatorial Election of 1915". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 75.
  • Cotterill, R. S. (1981). Dictionary of American Biography, Supplements 1–2: To 1940. New York City, New York: American Council of Learned Societies.
  • Harrison, Lowell H. (1992). "Morrow, Edwin P.". In Kleber, John E (ed.). The Kentucky Encyclopedia. Associate editors: Thomas D. Clark, Lowell H. Harrison, and James C. Klotter. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1772-0.
  • Harrison, Lowell H.; James C. Klotter (1997). A New History of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2008-X. Retrieved June 26, 2009.
  • Hay, Melba Porter (2004). "Edwin Porch Morrow". In Lowell H. Harrison (ed.). Kentucky's Governors. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2326-7.
  • Jillson, Willard Rouse (1921). Edwin P. Morrow – Kentuckian. Louisville, Kentucky: C.T. Dearing Printing Company. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
  • "Kentucky Governor Edwin Porch Morrow". National Governors Association. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
  • Klotter, James C. (1996). Kentucky: Portraits in Paradox, 1900–1950. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-916968-24-3. Retrieved June 26, 2009.
  • Powell, Robert A. (1976). Kentucky Governors. Danville, Kentucky: Bluegrass Printing Company. OCLC 2690774.
  • Tapp, Hambleton; James C. Klotter (1977). Kentucky: Decades of Discord, 1865–1900. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-916968-05-7. Retrieved April 30, 2009.
  • Wright, George C. (1990). Racial Violence in Kentucky, 1865–1940: Lynchings, Mob Rule, and "Legal Lynchings". Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-2073-6.

Further reading

  • "Kentucky Suffrage Bill Signed" (PDF). The New York Times. 1920-03-20. Retrieved 2009-08-26.

External links

  • Guide to the Edwin Porch Morrow papers, 1913-1940 housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center
  • . Archived from the original on May 18, 2005. Retrieved May 2, 2006., Chapter Nine, Biographical Sketches. Published by Somerset Community College.
  • Political Graveyard
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Kentucky
1919–1923
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Kentucky
1915, 1919
Succeeded by

edwin, morrow, edwin, porch, morrow, november, 1877, june, 1935, american, politician, served, 40th, governor, kentucky, from, 1919, 1923, only, republican, elected, this, office, between, 1907, 1927, championed, typical, republican, causes, namely, equal, rig. Edwin Porch Morrow November 28 1877 June 15 1935 was an American politician who served as the 40th Governor of Kentucky from 1919 to 1923 He was the only Republican elected to this office between 1907 and 1927 He championed the typical Republican causes of his day namely equal rights for African Americans and the use of force to quell violence Morrow had been schooled in his party s principles by his father Thomas Z Morrow who was its candidate for governor in 1883 and his uncle William O Bradley who was elected governor in 1895 Both men were founding members of the Republican Party in Kentucky Edwin P Morrow40th Governor of KentuckyIn office December 9 1919 December 11 1923LieutenantThruston BallardPreceded byJames D BlackSucceeded byWilliam J FieldsU S District Attorney for the Eastern District of KentuckyIn office 1910 1913Appointed byWilliam Howard TaftPersonal detailsBornNovember 28 1877Somerset KentuckyDiedJune 15 1935 1935 06 15 aged 57 Frankfort KentuckyResting placeFrankfort CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseKatherine Hale WaddleRelationsSon of Thomas Z MorrowNephew of William O BradleyAlma materUniversity of Cincinnati Law SchoolProfessionLawyerSignatureMilitary serviceBranch serviceU S ArmyYears of service1898 1899RankSecond lieutenantUnit4th Kentucky Infantry RegimentBattles warsSpanish American WarAfter rendering non combat service in the Spanish American War Morrow graduated from the University of Cincinnati Law School in 1902 and opened his practice in Lexington Kentucky He made a name for himself almost immediately by securing the acquittal of a black man charged with murder based on an extorted confession and perjured testimony He was appointed U S District Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky by President William Howard Taft in 1910 and served until he was removed from office in 1913 by President Woodrow Wilson In 1915 he ran for governor against his good friend Augustus O Stanley Stanley won the election by 471 votes making the 1915 contest the closest gubernatorial race in the state s history Morrow ran for governor again in 1919 His opponent James D Black had ascended to the governorship earlier that year when Stanley resigned to take a seat in the U S Senate Morrow encouraged voters to Right the Wrong of 1915 and ran on a progressive platform that included women s suffrage and quelling racial violence He charged the Democratic administration with corruption citing specific examples and won the general election in a landslide With a friendly legislature in 1920 he passed much of his agenda into law including an anti lynching law and reorganizing state government He won national acclaim for preventing the lynching of a black prisoner in 1920 He was not hesitant to remove local officials who did not deter or quell mob violence By 1922 Democrats regained control of the General Assembly and Morrow could not accomplish much in the second half of his term Following his term as governor he served on the United States Railroad Labor Board and the Railway Mediation Board but never again held elected office He died of a heart attack on June 15 1935 while living with a cousin in Frankfort Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 Governor of Kentucky 2 2 Later career and death 3 References 3 1 Bibliography 4 Further reading 5 External linksEarly life Edit Morrow s house in Somerset Edwin Morrow was of Scottish descent and was born to Thomas Zanzinger and Virginia Catherine Bradley Morrow in Somerset Kentucky on November 28 1877 1 2 He and his twin brother Charles were the youngest of eight children 3 His father was one of the founders of the Republican Party in Kentucky and an unsuccessful candidate for governor in 1883 4 His mother was a sister to William O Connell Bradley who was elected the first Republican governor of Kentucky in 1895 5 Morrow s great grandfather Thomas Morrow emigrated to America from Scotland before the Revolutionary War Morrow s early education was in the public schools of Somerset 5 At age 14 he entered preparatory school at St Mary s College near Lebanon Kentucky 6 He continued there throughout 1891 and 1892 6 From there he enrolled at Cumberland College now the University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg Kentucky and distinguished himself in the debating society 1 He was also interested in sports playing halfback on the football team and left field on the baseball team 7 On June 24 1898 Morrow enlisted as a private in the 4th Kentucky Infantry Regiment for service in the Spanish American War 1 5 8 He was first stationed at Lexington Kentucky and later trained at Anniston Alabama 9 Due to a bout with typhoid fever he never saw active duty and mustered out as a second lieutenant on February 12 1899 10 In 1900 he matriculated for the fall semester at the University of Cincinnati Law School 9 He graduated with a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1902 1 Morrow opened his practice in Lexington 1 He established his reputation in one of his first cases the trial of William Moseby a black man accused of murder 1 Moseby s first trial had ended in a hung jury but because the evidence against him included a confession which he later recanted most observers believed he would be convicted in his second trial 11 Unable to find a defense lawyer for Moseby the judge in the case turned to Morrow who as a young lawyer was eager for work 11 Morrow proved that his client s testimony had been extorted he had been told that a lynch mob waited outside the jail for him but no such mob had ever existed 12 Morrow further showed that other testimony against his client was false 1 Moseby was acquitted on September 21 1902 12 Morrow returned to Somerset in 1903 4 There he married Katherine Hale Waddle on June 18 1903 5 Waddle s father had studied law under Morrow s father and Edwin and Katherine had been playmates schoolmates and later sweethearts 13 The couple had two children Edwina Haskell in July 1904 and Charles Robert in November 1908 14 Political career EditIn 1904 Morrow was appointed city attorney for Somerset serving until 1908 4 President William Howard Taft appointed him U S District Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky in 1910 5 He continued in this position until he was removed from office by President Woodrow Wilson in 1913 4 5 William O Bradley Morrow s uncle was elected governor of Kentucky in 1895 Morrow s first political experience was working in his uncle William O Bradley s gubernatorial campaign in 1895 2 In 1899 Republican gubernatorial candidate William S Taylor offered to make Morrow his Secretary of State in exchange for Bradley s support in the election Bradley refused 15 Despite the encouragement of friends Morrow declined to run for governor in 1911 4 In 1912 Morrow was chosen as the Republican candidate for the Senate seat of Thomas Paynter 16 Paynter had decided not to seek re election and the Democrats nominated Ollie M James of Crittenden County 16 The General Assembly was heavily Democratic and united behind James 16 On a joint ballot James defeated Morrow by a vote of 105 28 16 Due to the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment the following year this was the last time the Kentucky legislature would elect a senator 16 At the state Republican convention in Lexington on June 15 1915 Morrow was chosen as the Republican candidate for governor over Latt F McLaughlin 17 18 His Democratic opponent was his close friend Augustus O Stanley 4 Morrow charged previous Democratic administrations with corruption and called for the election of a Republican because You cannot clean house with a dirty broom 19 Both men ran on progressive platforms and the election went in Stanley s favor by only 471 votes 4 Although it was the closest gubernatorial vote in the state s history Morrow refused to challenge the results which significantly increased his popularity 17 His decision was influenced by the fact that a challenge would be decided by the General Assembly which had a Democratic majority in both houses 20 Governor of Kentucky Edit Morrow served as a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1916 1920 and 1928 2 In 1919 he was chosen by acclamation as his party s candidate for governor 17 This time his opponent was James D Black 4 Black was Stanley s lieutenant governor and had ascended to the governorship in May 1919 when Stanley resigned to take a seat in the U S Senate 4 Morrow encouraged the state s voters to Right the Wrong of 1915 21 He again ran on a progressive platform advocating an amendment to the state constitution to grant women s suffrage 4 His support was not as strong for a prohibition amendment 4 He attacked the Stanley Black administration as corrupt 4 Days before the election he exposed a contract the state Board of Control awarded to a non existent company 4 Historian Lowell H Harrison argued that Black s refusal to remove the members of the board following this revelation probably sealed his defeat 4 Morrow won the general election by more than 40 000 votes 4 It was the largest margin of victory for a Republican gubernatorial candidate in the state s history 21 Morrow signs the bill ratifying the 19th Amendment Kentucky Equal Rights Association members look on in celebration January 6 1920 On January 6 1920 Governor Morrow signed the bill ratifying the Nineteenth Amendment making Kentucky the 23rd state to ratify it and the moment is captured in a photograph with members of the Kentucky Equal Rights Association During the 1920 legislative session the Republicans held a majority in the state House of Representatives and were a minority by only two votes in the state Senate 4 During the session Morrow was often able to convince C W Burton a Democratic senator from Grant County to support Republican proposals 22 Tie votes in the Senate were broken by Republican lieutenant governor S Thruston Ballard 22 Consequently Morrow was able to effect a considerable reorganization of the state government including replacing the Board of Control with a nonpartisan Board of Charities and Corrections centralizing highway works and revising property taxes 4 23 He oversaw improvements to the education system including better textbook selection and a tax on racetracks to support a minimum salary for teachers 4 22 Among Morrow s reforms that did not pass was a proposal to make the judiciary nonpartisan 4 Morrow urged enforcement of state laws against carrying concealed weapons and restricted activities of the Ku Klux Klan 4 During his first year in office he granted only 100 pardons 24 This was a considerable decrease from the number granted by his immediate predecessors During their first years in office J C W Beckham granted 350 pardons James B McCreary during his second stint as governor granted 139 and Augustus O Stanley granted 257 24 He was also an active member of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation a society for the elimination of racial violence in the South 25 A mob gathered outside the courthouse during the trial of Will Lockett in 1920 On February 9 1920 Morrow dispatched the Kentucky National Guard to Lexington to protect Will Lockett a black World War I veteran on trial for murder 26 Morrow told the state adjutant general Do as much as you have to do to keep that negro in the hands of the law If he falls into the hands of the mob I do not expect to see you alive 27 Lockett had already confessed without the benefit of a lawyer to the murder 26 His trial took only thirty minutes as he pleaded guilty but asked for a life sentence instead of death 27 Despite his plea he was sentenced to die in the electric chair 27 A crowd of several thousand gathered outside the courthouse while Lockett s trial was underway 26 A cameraman asked a large group of those gathered to shake their fists and yell so he could get a picture 28 The rest of the crowd mistakenly believed they were storming the courthouse and rushed forward 28 In the ensuing skirmish one policeman was injured so badly that his arm was later amputated 29 The National Guard opened fire killing six people and wounding approximately fifty 28 Some members of the mob looted nearby stores in search of weapons to retaliate but reinforcements arrived from a nearby army post by mid afternoon 30 Martial law was declared and no further violence was perpetrated 30 A month later Lockett was executed at the Kentucky State Penitentiary in Eddyville 30 The incident is believed to be the first forceful suppression of a lynch mob by state and local officials in the South 26 Morrow received a laudatory telegram from the NAACP and most of the national press regarding the incident was favorable W E B Du Bois called it the Second Battle of Lexington 29 Morrow was consistent in his use of state troops to end violence in the state In 1922 he again dispatched the National Guard to quell a violent mill strike in Newport 4 Morrow also demanded consistency from local law enforcement officials In 1921 he removed the Woodford County jailer from office because he allowed a black inmate to be lynched and offered a reward of 25 000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrators 31 Citizens of Versailles were more outraged that the jailer had been removed from office than that the prisoner had been lynched 32 The locals refused to aid in the investigation and the lynchers were never arrested or charged 33 Local officials appointed the jailer s wife to finish his term in an attempt to skirt the removal 34 In August 1922 a traveling salesman named Jack Eaton was arrested for allegedly assaulting several young girls 34 The girls parents refused to press charges and Eaton was released 34 Later he was captured by a mob who cut him several times and poured turpentine into his wounds 34 An investigation found that the Scott County sheriff had willfully delivered Eaton to the mob and Morrow removed him from office 34 Though Eaton was a white man blacks were elated with the removal because they hoped it would encourage other jailers to step up efforts to protect against lynchings and mob violence 34 Morrow was frequently mentioned as a potential candidate for vice president in 1920 Still he withdrew his name from consideration sticking to a campaign promise not to seek a higher office while governor On July 27 1920 he made a speech in Northampton Massachusetts officially notifying Calvin Coolidge of his nomination for that office Although he supported Frank O Lowden for president the nomination went to Warren G Harding and Morrow campaigned vigorously on behalf of his party s ticket 35 In his address to the 1922 legislature Morrow asked for 50 million for improvements to the state highway system and the repeal of all laws denying equal rights to women 4 He also recommended a large bond issue to finance improvements to the state s universities schools prisons and hospitals 36 By this time however the Republicans had surrendered their majority in the state House and practically all of Morrow s proposals were voted down 4 Morrow countered by vetoing several Democratic bills including 700 000 in appropriations 4 37 Among the few accomplishments of the 1922 legislature were the passage of an anti lynching law the abolition of convict labor and the establishment of normal schools at Murray and Morehead 28 37 Today these schools are Murray State University and Morehead State University respectively The 1922 legislature also established a commission to govern My Old Kentucky Home State Park and approved construction of the Jefferson Davis Monument 37 Although Morrow gained national praise for his handling of the Lockett trial historian James C Klotter opined that he left behind a solid and rather typical record for a Kentucky governor 38 He cited Morrow s fiscal conservatism and inability to control the legislature in 1922 as reasons for his lackluster assessment However he praised Morrow s advancement of racial equality in the state The state constitution prohibited Morrow from seeking a second consecutive term and the achievements of his administration were not significant enough to ensure the election of Charles I Dawson his would be Republican successor in the gubernatorial election of 1923 38 Later career and death Edit Following his term as governor Morrow retired to Somerset where he became active in the Watchmen of the Republic an organization devoted to eradicating prejudice and promoting tolerance 4 He served on the United States Railroad Labor Board from 1923 to 1926 and its successor the Railway Mediation Board from 1926 to 1934 4 He resigned to run for a seat in the U S House of Representatives representing the Ninth District but lost his party s nomination to John M Robsion 5 36 Following his defeat in the congressional primary Morrow planned to return to Lexington to resume his law practice 36 On June 15 1935 he died unexpectedly of a heart attack while temporarily living with a cousin in Frankfort 36 He is buried in Frankfort Cemetery 2 References Edit a b c d e f g Hay p 152 a b c d Kentucky Governor Edwin Porch Morrow National Governors Association Jillson p 22 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Harrison in The Kentucky Encyclopedia p 655 a b c d e f g Powell p 86 a b Jillson p 24 Jillson p 25 Tapp p 376 a b Jillson p 27 Cotterill in Dictionary of American Biography a b Jillson p 30 a b Jillson p 31 Jillson p 33 Jillson p 34 Tapp p 425 a b c d e Klotter p 220 a b c Hay p 153 Appleton p 32 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky p 285 Harrison in A New History of Kentucky pp 285 286 a b Klotter p 233 a b c Klotter p 267 Jillson p 56 a b Jillson p 61 Wright p 12 a b c d Klotter p 69 a b c Wright p 195 a b c d Harrison in A New History of Kentucky p 351 a b Wright p 196 a b c Klotter p 70 Hay p 154 Wright p 203 Wright pp 203 204 a b c d e f Wright p 204 Hay pp 154 155 a b c d Hay p 155 a b c Klotter p 268 a b Klotter p 275 Bibliography Edit Appleton Jr Thomas H January 1977 Prohibition and Politics in Kentucky The Gubernatorial Election of 1915 The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 75 Cotterill R S 1981 Dictionary of American Biography Supplements 1 2 To 1940 New York City New York American Council of Learned Societies Harrison Lowell H 1992 Morrow Edwin P In Kleber John E ed The Kentucky Encyclopedia Associate editors Thomas D Clark Lowell H Harrison and James C Klotter Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 1772 0 Harrison Lowell H James C Klotter 1997 A New History of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2008 X Retrieved June 26 2009 Hay Melba Porter 2004 Edwin Porch Morrow In Lowell H Harrison ed Kentucky s Governors Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2326 7 Jillson Willard Rouse 1921 Edwin P Morrow Kentuckian Louisville Kentucky C T Dearing Printing Company Retrieved August 30 2009 Kentucky Governor Edwin Porch Morrow National Governors Association Retrieved April 2 2012 Klotter James C 1996 Kentucky Portraits in Paradox 1900 1950 Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 916968 24 3 Retrieved June 26 2009 Powell Robert A 1976 Kentucky Governors Danville Kentucky Bluegrass Printing Company OCLC 2690774 Tapp Hambleton James C Klotter 1977 Kentucky Decades of Discord 1865 1900 Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 916968 05 7 Retrieved April 30 2009 Wright George C 1990 Racial Violence in Kentucky 1865 1940 Lynchings Mob Rule and Legal Lynchings Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 2073 6 Further reading Edit Kentucky Suffrage Bill Signed PDF The New York Times 1920 03 20 Retrieved 2009 08 26 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edwin P Morrow Guide to the Edwin Porch Morrow papers 1913 1940 housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center Pulaski County Historical Fact Book II Archived from the original on May 18 2005 Retrieved May 2 2006 Chapter Nine Biographical Sketches Published by Somerset Community College Kentucky Governors 1907 1927 Political GraveyardPolitical officesPreceded byJames D Black Governor of Kentucky1919 1923 Succeeded byWilliam J FieldsParty political officesPreceded byEdward C O Rear Republican nominee for Governor of Kentucky1915 1919 Succeeded byCharles I Dawson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edwin P Morrow amp oldid 1142112814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.